Mercurial Quick Start Cheatsheet

Andrew Bolster

Researcher at the University of Liverpool, Founder/Director at Farset Labs

I hadn’t used Mercurial before so I thought it might be a good idea to leave a reminder for me and anyone else who comes across it…

For tidyness, I do all of my dev-stuff (Subversion, Mercurial, CVS, Git etc) under ~/src and only take root privileges when its needed; any good makefile should relocate the necessary files for you at the ‘make install’ or equivalent point.

Update:This article was picked up by the guys at DevCheatSheet.com and I’m really honoured to be included in a site that I’ve been dipping into over the years, so if you need any kind of cheat sheet or quick reference, I highly recommend checking them out. Anyway…

To start off, you should add some form of identification to your ~/.hgrc file

$ cat ~/.hgrc
[ui]
username = User Name

Now you can connect to $HOSTNAME and grab a clone of $PROJECT for you to work on

$ hg clone http://$HOSTNAME/repo/$PROJECT
$ cd $PROJECT

Now you can work away, but if you add any files, remember before you commit back to the server to add the new files into the project manifest;

$ hg add $ADDFILES

Once you’ve made your changes, commit and push them back to the host with an appropriate comment.

$ hg commit -m 'I added $ADDFILES to extend/fix/etc'
$ hg push

If you dont want to make any changes, but you’ve clones a project (say to install something…) and 6 months later you want to update it, you don’t have to delete and recreate the directory;

Of course, this assumed you haven’t been tinkering with the code, in which case update will generally override your changes and reproduce whatever is currently sitting on the project server. If you want to merge, do so!